Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1949 — Page 1

16, 1949

'g ndays

t the West

eedway will.

Sunday, re~

night show,

| for 1 p.m, rent at 2:30,

Arivers only,

sotball

derson (Kr) 8 Tolleston 0

-

195

WOOL and - oulder seams, ffs. . PURPLE, OLD, ROYAL

9

OWNSTAIRS

~

~ Casting. for Fish and Threat of Vast :

.1 fisherman, took time out from ; . “Kick » H Fuel, Ditched Craft icked off” by miners in Wyom-|

PRR We i v i i . . on ef

ihe %

Bene

ianapolis Times

FORECAST: Considerable cloudiness tonight, tomorrow, Occasional rain likely through tomorrow forenoon. Low tonight, 60. High tomorrow, 74.

scrrrps ~nowaxnl 00th YEAR—NUMBER 189 .“e

I »

Luxury Ship Fire Dead May Reach Majority Believed Tourists Fro

1500 Line Lake Shores Nation Faces f .. And in Health’ Court Holds

|

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1949 | tee oe cu utr Boats —

* y S oF | Tie Roe rine: Industy Tie

Central Indiana Vie for Valuable Awards Report Mine Strike | pF

Officials Prepare og : se By JIM SMITH, Times Fishing and Hunting Editor 1 Avoid Sion! | c pa | Building Jammed With Victims YELLOWWOOD LAKE, Brown County, Sept. 17— ready On; tee | ,- Fifteen hundred fishermen of all ages from 2 to 72 lined the Union Set to Quit

shores of Yellowwood Lake this morning to cast for tagged The a United yr | SoHo fish and a treasure house of valuable prizes in the second by i On was Lhrealem annual Times Fishing Rodeo. y its greatest industhial They came from all over central Indiana and brought udev Jetory Slay with them their tackle, vo 18 a Simprimron] W n L. Lewis ;

: miners perhaps already on! = coats, lunches and plenty of Planes Hunt strike and Philip Murray's

itrial experimental period. gay week-end.

enthusiasm. 500.000" Steelworkers ready to A good many of them arrived 3 . walk .out in eight days. 1 |ice Wednesday morning. About : before dawn and by the 8 a. m. ost d ers A high-ranking officer of the 542 meters already have been in- the fire, Dr. Smirle starting time, this 147-acre lake United Mine Workers said that a i ig was well populated. nationwide strike had already! | Mayor Feeney said the city will

Gov. Schricker, the state's No. Believe falians Out of started in the sort coal industry, |

a busy Saturday schedule of con- ing and Utah.

200; m U.S. 100-Foot Flames Rip

Parking Meter Lake Craft at Toronto; Project Legal More Than 100 Hurt

| 156 Bodies Recovered; Morgue, Exposition i

To Start Their | By THOMAS G. McQUAID, United Press Staff Correspondent Use Wedensday I" "TORONTO, Sept. 17—A flash fire turned the luxurg | Special Judge Otto W. Cox cruiser Noronic, “Queen of the Great Lakes,” into a roaring today ruled that the City of funeral pyre early today and Police Inspector Vernon Page Indianapolis has a legal right said number of dead might reach 200. to install parking meters on Most of them were United States tourists who boarded its streets for a mine-month the famous excursion boat at Detroit and Cleveland for &

City officials, meanwhile, began Blanket-wrapped bodies were still being brought from getting the meters ready for serv- the charred ruins of the floating pleasure palace hours after chief coroner, declined #4... (stalled in downtown Indianapolis. to release any names until identification was complete. ; remove conflicting parking signs Said the next of kin would be notified in all tases before « {before the meters are used. the names were weleased.

« ferences. and appearances to open,

doesn’t leave much time for fish-

‘Bridge ...... 3| Marriage .... 7

“I wish I had the time fo pull) Navy a few fish out myself.” the GOV-| tanned ernor said. “But this job of mine nog roundland today in an inten-! dustry Monday. ing.” . | Among the fishermen were such hardy anglers as Jacqueline,

had run out of fuel by 10 a. m. pjajs,

setts Ave. » . (Indianapolis time) and had been 87,000 Others Quit Having Wonderful Time | 1qr00q to diteh their plane in the), ." or 000 Qu read “We're having a wonderful geean. H men already

time.” they said, Eighteen planes of all services are on strike in various smaller Mr. and Mrs. John Schmidt, 428 and two Coast Guard cutters were disputes across the nation and : scouring the seas, but by 11 a. m. 200,000 - CIO Electrical Workers! the pair had not been sighted. y.la ready to take a strike vote! dgainst General Electric and

FE. Michigan St. didn't get any bites at first but said they were mw... pad not been heard from having a good deal of fun any- for more than 17 hours. way. - Consul Asks Search

| Westinghouse. The lake was loaded with fish.! Mr Brondello, the pilot. apd his

to gold, the sun came out and 4¢ 5 promised a beautiful afternoon.

many ‘qf the fishermen had small Coast Guard WAFeH “wher the to the pits Monday. as. scheduled. fires burning with coffee pots fight single-engined plane failed In the steel dispute, Mr. Mur- | eS ia ray and ‘executives of the-indus-vised stone ovens. The Coast Guard, which al- try exchanged another round of This second annual ‘fishing ro- ready had sent out. a land, sea telegrams yesterday deo was scheduled to close at 4jand air alarm for the plane, as- Pass the blame for a strike if it p. m. At that time, the large list|gyred Mr. Perrone that a search|develops. Both sides agreéd’ to had begun at 6 a. m. (Indianapo- Meet with Mr. Ching Monday, |

perched precariously on impro-| to report.

of prizes was to be distributed to the anglers hauling the biggest

lis time). however.

tagged fish from the lake. Reports Favorable Winds - © | At St. Louis, meanwhile, ofiDumped. Intp Water The Coast Guard said the last clals of five striking railroad,

word from Mr. Brondello early unions instructed pickets to con-| Hundres: of wgged. fish were ot night was that he was en. fine their activities to’ the struck!

dumped into the water last night| untering favorable winds ‘ and

by “the State Conservation Dé-noped to arrive at La Guardia X6€p away from: tracks of “the! matried. at. 71:30.p. Field at 12 midnight (Indianapo- Cotton Belt and Gulf, Mobile &

partment. {

Since there were no advance lis time). Ohio_tracks.

registrations required, sportsmen However, bad static over the Offers Liberalized Plan Atlantic blanked out.-any further! jaqt night, the Goodrich Rubcommunication with him. ber Company offered to liberalize insurance and employee benefits

to settle a 20-day-old strike call signal in English and Italian 17.000 CIO rubber workers.

were expected to swell the throng

throughout the day. The competi-| The La Guardia Airport control’

tion. was being left open to new- t,yer was sending out the fliers’ comers all day. Even a late after-

noon angler could cop the biggest prize of the day if he (or she) pulls out the biggest tagged bass.

at 10-minute intervals, in hope of contacting the plane. !

Store and the Champion's trophy

from L. Strauss & Co. were “losing ground.on all sides.” each. The early arrivals gave every sh —- Ee Se — fa

indicati t king it “family . EE maxis or ly Two Bandits Captured

came with picnic baskets chocked

full. For th ho didn’t bring] Pp s ie ar teas ne In ark After Wild Chase |

ready to serve food.

The rules for today's event were | Take Taxicab and $22 From Driver designed for fair competition and, . of Or all ore Ds And Flee Police Until They Crash were provided for children as Two. men were captured in Brookside Park early today after well as adults. Men, women, boys police followed a stolen taxicab in a wild chase through city streets. and" girls competed for prizes in The men later were identified by the driver of the United Cab

their own divisions. All fishing as two of three bandit§ who took his car and $22 from him on Inwas being done from the.shore- dian Lake Road near Sunnyside Sanitarium about 12:45 a. m. line since boats were barred. All Police placed pre-robbery charges against Lester W

fish must be caught by hook and of 720 W. New York St., and Wil-

line, either with the rod and reel liam McFarland, 19, of 610 E. Pamed Ft. Harrison as. their

or the “bent hook™ method. 12th St. | destination.

| : | fified by his companions, was still McFarland, who -U. S. Retains {at large. } in the back seat, | . . | The chase began when police in| Mr. Whitlock, put his arm around Ryder Golf Cup a patrol car saw United Cab 263, the cab driver's neck and said: — - —— | containing two men, being driven: - “You know what this is, don’t Arp Earlier Story, Page 7 __ in a reckless manner south on you?” GANTON, Eng,, Sept. .7 (UP) Avondale Place about 2 a. m. - | Slaps Vietim Twice — The United States retained pos- | JRTeOnS AIO LANTOS Mr. Whitlock sald he surmised

The officers pursued the. cab as session of the Ryder Cup today it careened around corners from when Chick Harbert beat Sam 21st St. to LaSalle St. and south’ King 4 and 3 in the seventh of the to Brookside Pkwy. N. Drive day's eight singles matches. where the cab went down a steep aid It was the sixth victory for the embankment and smashed to a :

United States, with only one|halt as it failed to negotiate a; The cab driver told. police he match to go. Should Britain win| curve. {escaped from the three while they were occupied in breaking

it to tie at 6 matches all, the During the pursuit the officers United States, under Ryder Cup| heard by radio that the cab they rules, would retain the famed| were. chasing had been stolen golfing trophy. . (from United Cab driver Virgil Harbert’'s victory left it up to |Whitlock, 2701 Mars Hill St, Lloyd Mangrum to put, the United|about an hour earlier. States in front, for all other| The two men in the cab jumped

the lighted cab s windshield. They

summon police.

the two, halted and was arrested Man.

'after Patrolman George Corydon :| fired four shots. J

27 holes, Mangrum was leading Fred Paly, ‘1 pp.

Amusem'nts 5-9) Inside Indpls. 5 London discovered . McFariana Pm: Books

vssssed B| Mrs, Manners 7 d . He was treated in General Hos- HELEN HAYES ILL crviched 1 Pogues Run. in the ital for bruises and cuts on the - {left side of his face and head. Actréss Helen Hayes was stricken area in with influenza today, forcing canng when cellation of four week-end per-| spectacles formances of ‘Good Housekeep-!

Churches ... 4|Movies .....5-9 Park. He was in water up to his Comics .... 14] Novel ...... 11 Deck, police said.

. NEW-YORK, 8¢pt:-15-¢UP)—.. Fedegal -mediators. led. by. Di-| “the weighing station: — ~~=v~ Coast Guard ships and Air Force, rector Cyfus Ching planned to and Coast Guard planes meet with union and . industry out over the Atlantic off representatives in the steel in-

|sive search for two Italian fliers Strikes in the basic coal andl missing in their single-engined steel industries would throw per- | plage, Rls tossed the. fiers Joha {haps another 500,000 workers out Tester. of 3540 Kerchval Dr. and cials fear e fliers, of employment across the nation/ J. 0. Cooley, of 6865 Magsachu- Brondello and Camillo Barioglio,|for lack of fuel and raw mate-|

inouncement after conferring with, 4 3 . |8cott Ging, Marion County attor-| Firemen pushed into the cabins of the Noronic as soon

ney. ‘as they were cool enough to enter. The buckled, blackened

A prominent UMW official who

As a gray veil of rain lifted over copilot had hoped to fly nonstop 3*ked to be unnamed said “a na-| the Brown County hills where! rrgm the Azores to New York. tionwide coal strike has started) the leaves were beginning to turn Theip last message was received and Wyoming and Utah— District, “sho p. m. yesterday. s 22 in the union—were chosen to: lian Vice Consul Carlo Per- Kick it off ™ He said the district's) 3 poy 5 . - Eo It was cool but not chilly and/pone said he had asked for a 5000 members would not return Jimmy Wilson, Brownsburg, and Mary Jane Purdue, Evansville,

-get-licamse from Mrs, Barbary Groover, in Danville gourd house. Two Young Polio Victims To Be Wed at Brownsburg

Couple Met as Patients at Riley Hospital; Groom Was Once High School Athlete

Times State Service | BROWNSBURG, Sept. 17—Two young polio victims who met, {while .convalescing in the Riley Hospital, Indianapolis, will be Sour] Fuse Ratu vd m..today in the Brownsburg Methodist Church. and braces ‘on both legs, Jimmy Wiison, Brownsburg, former Brownsburg High School all-around athlete, will meet at the altar’ with his pretty chosen bride, Mary Jane

Freighter Aground . With 30 Aboard

The firm did not mention a wage offer although 3 The one who hauls in the biggest REDS LOSING GROUND had asked for a 25-tent hourly tagged bass was to receive a, NEW YORK, Sept. 17 (UP)— hike. The benefits offer would $200 Mercury outboard motor waiter H. Annenberg, publisher amount to $25 a week per man from Em-Boe Sporting Goods of the Philadelphia Inquirer, said and $18 a week per woman with today that European Communists employees paying §1 per week

{against traffic congestion and

Aided by crutches condemned as an.additional tax th

Purdue, Evansville,

She, too, will be wearing steel Judge Cox - explained that the bury Park, N.J. braces on both legs and walk- narking meter contract was “not. The Morro Castle, en route

church to overflowing. " Jimmy, 22, was stricken by inMIAMI, Fla. Sept. 17 (UP)—A gantile paralysis in October, 1944. He played one year of high school yearning of “the county oppobasketball, three years of track sition, Mayor Feeney remarked: mid-ocean on Oct. 9, 1913; 135 Al Lindgren, manager of the and four years of baseball, before, “How can we ever get to build died; the emigrant: ship Cospat- ship's bar, said he believed the

He wax graduated a City-County building together rick on Dec. 6. 1874; 470 dead. fire started amidship, near the from school in a wheelchair.

Jimmy has been the collection of thousands of! jdollars to fight polio. (has included” personal appeals Glogs Door in Chase to New York, burned in mid- time was lost by the ship's crew {from his wheelchair, and lat : | The stranded vessel is- the 8S| Brabant, listed by Lloys of Lon-| |don as a 2548-ton freighter owned during her by the Ganger Rolf Co., Oslo.

30 crewmen aboard, was aground off the southern coast of {Cuba today and radioed it was | “urgently in need of assistance.” Distress signals picked up here location among the tiny islands spotting ! |between Cuba and the Isle of

er, |

of 25 or 30 men.

= | ~The third man, although iden-| At 4000 Massachusetts

‘The location was reported here as some 50 miles below the Cuban

it hold The th took dy Skies Seen it was a holdup. e three too him to Indian Lake Rd. where For Week-End H Waddell. slapped him twice in the / ' face and took $22, Mr. Whitlock

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

few retail operators for a loss but . complain _ are unable to block Ft: Wayne Cigar Store, 833 Ft. ’ » Fire Under Control the printing and distribution of Wayne'Ave., police said. . a \the cards. State law, they say,| Another raiding party ‘visited “slightly tipsy” whén he broke control and hundreds of firemen Considerably cloudy skies were|falls to make printing and dis-'& smoke shop at 468 Mas- into the furniture store. Norman began moving through the ship, forécast for Indianapolis tonight tributing lottery tickets illegal. The football cards, lifsing $0. {DOOKS, baseball tickets and foot- Hart was an employee. ' aft through the charred; blacks 'day’s opening games, are printéd ball cards. ERD y|and ae me the Before the night was over, po- under his arm three stores away. soaked debris, looking for the {through tomorrow forenoon, butigtate by an Indidnapolls syndi-|lice closed in on 425 W, Washing-| ; Smith, temperatures would remain about! cate. After dropping to 60

he said, but he eluded them In a nearby yard and got away to,

Police were unable to deter- and tomorrow b

w by the Weather matches: were in. At the end of out and ran but Waddell, one of mine what happened to the third Bureau today. : |

Another robbery was reported | : last night when James M. More police were dispatched to!76, of 2015 Winter Ave. said he steady. Times Index ‘ |the area and a short time later| Vas slugged and relieved of ‘his ionight, the mercury will reach |Officer Corydon and Sgt. Cecil bilifold containing $19 near his|74 degrees tomorrow.

Have Special ‘Warrants Armed with kpecial “John Doé” tery tickets. warrants, police raiders visited The only other person arrested ;, —-12707% KE. Washington St. and in the lottery crackdown was {made 13 arrests and confiscated Meyer Lieberman, 59, of 17 E.\p { oaseall tenet, Todtharl oaras. Bich BL. woo ules said displayed kp Chanel a mile and a! On the shore, Red works card tables, decks of cards and the football cards in a smoker at football lottery receipts.

' .leonfiscating equipment and .lot- Plynges Into Channel Jamo were twisted and

OLNEY, Md., Sept. 17 (UP)—

Crossword ... 7|Radio ....... 8 The cab driver, whose ‘wallet or Ro, i Editorials ...10| Society <..... 3 and cigaret lighter were found in/y¢tacked found his Foreign Aff, 10 Sports ...... 6 the cab by police, said three men/sna a broken wine bottle with ing" Forum ......10 Women's .... 3 had flagged him down in the 300 which they assumed he had been Doctors said. Miss

_ . |30 8- Illinois Bt. : Jen joined launches from the hula ke th In cases where warrants weren't, Other football parlay tickets Felixstowe Air Force station In Sibu — al Ake SHA

at the summer theater here. available, police. confiscated the were picked up at 805 W. 30th St. search of the area where the sin- y Hayes' condi gaming equipment and made no 708 E. 19th St. and 1212 E: 19th gle-seater ‘plane was seen to Hospitals, doctors and the

Judge Cox. handing down_the/ Ten hours after the 100-foot flames swept the Noronia

decisiorr after a day-long hear-| : i orp yesterday--on-—a--taxpayer:s. from giggp to stern, Police Inspector Robert Davies esti:

Ls : |temporary injunction suit filed by| msted that 1156 bodies had been recovered from the |Attorney James M. Dawson, said: iw .

“The ruling gives the city the Wreckage. aia

|opportunity to decide whether it| “More bodies are still on the ship,” Mr. Davies said. wants meters or not.”

Attorney Aren N. Bobbitt, for- Officials, said it would take hours to determine accus

mer state Republican chairman rately the number of dead. More than 100 were injured.

{representing Mr. Dawson, said he Some of the dead were at the city morgue, others in an iwould continue to fight parking

meters by filing for a permanent €Mmergency morgue on the Canadian National Exhibition

Injunction. |grounds, and the tarpaulin-shrouded bodies of still others .

Mr. Bobbitt made this an- lay on the docks :

Cox's deci hailed ; : yO probing’ bpp: Rpm hull of the ship lay at an uneasy 10 degree list.

'Hollett, who represented the City] Many of the passengers were roused from a sound sleep jof Indianapolis defending the » (“trial purchase” of the meters. 'andpolis, I want to say that we of Covington, Ky, said. “Smoke was everywhere. 1 screamed to |appreciate~the careful attention my husband ‘to wake up.

|into a wild confusion of bedlam and death. “On behalf of the City of Indi-! “I woke up and the room was all ablaze” Mrs. M. J. Hackman

Judge Cox has given to the case * “The heat was terrible, and people were screaming all about us, {and the splendid way he tried We got outside on the deck and jumped into the water. I could see

it,” Mr. Hollett said in court, - other people jumping. - Some of them were on fire. It's a miracle

y ; " 2 anyone was saved.

HS A A

“Not Polling Fonte! 7 bonain EE Accepting the verdict as “not E

ys a sisi ci nic | N A + |" The Noronie docked here Inst a losing the fight,” Attorney Ging J Oromc | er night with 540 passengers, 3 closing 8 y 8 of whom boarded it at Detroit

and Cleveland, and 190 crewmen,

31 . i “We are not folding our tents.” . ) * Parking meters, long a con- | 1934 | The passengers reported a gay troversial issue. in Indianapolis, | crossing of Lake Ontaria. It had were given the approval of the : 'not been determined how many Board of Works, Board of Safety Safa : passengers and crew’ members and City Council in. addition to| 134 Perished Then JN went ashore for the night. Mayor Feeney. Morro Castle Fire ’ But scores who stayed aboard The meters, praised as a blow Br Untied Preis | were trapped. The disastrous fire that swept| Some of the survivors told of "the “cruiser ~ Noronic. while she grabbing fire extinguishers from on motorists, were supplied by M./y.o perthed at a Toronto pier, ga walls, only to find them H. Rhodes; Inc, of Hartford, may have been the worst since empty. 5 | Conn. . 1934, when 134 persons died’ . : Was nos press Before announcing his decision, aboard the Morro Castle off As- A . The survivors huddled on the shore, some hysterical, some in : dazed silence, as the blanket-cove

told the court:

| |

a sale contract.” He said it was from Havana to New York with

The courageous couple will re- more like a written memorandum 549 persons aboard, caught fire ,d stretchers were carried past peat their .vows after the Rev. which covers a nine-month experi- On Sept. 8. That same year. on frase Arthur Howell] while hundreds of mental period of operation. Jan. 21, the Chinese steamer Mayor Hitam McCallum tole

Radios It's Urgently friends and relatives fill tHe small "In Need of Help

When Marion County and of- Weitung .burned on thé Yangtse : River with the loss of 216 lives, Other Ship Disasters

ficials opposed the parking meter

plan as “discriminatory.” County therisHinRfrestw Attorney Ging was instructed to on Fup = Hi high loss rible” disaster in Toronto's hise

aid M¥. Dawson's taxpayer's suit. The steamship Volturno. tory were United States tourists, wrecked by fire and explosion in Cause Undetermined

phoned the mayors of Cleveland, 0., and Detroit, Mich., that most of the victims of “the most tere

when they keep fighting us.” Steamer Stonewall, which bar: which had been the center mmm burned on Oct. 27, 1869, below of the night's revelry. The cause

Deputies Run Through Cairo. Til; 200 dead: the steam- was undetesmined, P ’ 9 er Austria, bound“from Hamburg City fire officials said valuable

SAN RAFAEL, Cal, Sept. 17 ocean on Sept. 13, 1858; 471 dead; trying to extinguish the "flames

Mary Jane, 21. was stricken |(UP)—Three deputy sheriffs were the steamer Griffith burned on before sounding an alarm. in| 80 intent in theig, pursuit of an dead: the A G h bi | Evansville High School in August. ®SCaping prisoner that they ran dead; e merican emigrant lieved caught in their cabins. The Coast Guard here said the 1941. NR ihocy trips to surgery through a glass door when the Ship Ocean Monarch burned off. When eity fire fighters arrived, Brabant probably carriéd a crew blocked her valiant efforts to fin- fugitive slammed it in their faces. Carnarvonshire, North Wales, on the ship. was burning from end ish her junior year.

Lake Erie, June 17, 1850; 300 sons on the lower decks were bee

One of the deputies was treated Aug. 24. 1848; 200. dead; the to end. Firemen scrambled up exs

licensed | for cuts and bruises. The other Steamer Phoenix burned on Lake tension ladders from the shore to sistance from Jamaica and sur- Watchmaker, Jimmy hopes to set- two escaped injury and.captured Michigan on Nov. 21; 1847; 240 the upper deck and carried scores vey flights to the scene were sent |tle in Brownsburg and open his the prisoner, Robert J. Goodrich, dead, and on Jan. 13, 1840, the of passengers huddled there to off from Cuban airports at dawn. |OWn shop, in the near future. The commercial tug sent from Jamaica can reach the scene to-

22. after a two-block chase. steamboat Lexington burned off safety. . some screaming: and - — Eaton's Neck, N. Y., with a loss fighting in fear,

Police Hit Football Lottery =“ Be date Wher” PE

passengers

So to the area and helped with the rescue ‘until the heat from the

i ; sy blazing ship drove them back. He Swiped a Radio The het a on the

* * , He Wanted "Music the water - and were hauled Line for 500-Ticket Loss With His Wine ‘aboard small boats which raced | Fast Moving Squad Makes 13 Arrests ’ In Round-Clock Raids on Suspected Joints

City polite officially opened thie college gridiron season today I WANTED music. with my ark waterfront attracted an, ge hrowing football lottery operatbrs for a loss with round-the- Wine.

===!clock raids on suspected gambling’ joints. Pollen Count. , ,. 18 per cu. yd. |

timated 200,000, persons. ’ Frank B. Hart, 43, of 516 N, -FOF more than seven hours,

A n ar ae " firemen poured tons of water inte Police raiding parties, led by Capt. Harry—Yarbrough; Capt. Alabama St. confessed this to d Ralph Chambers and Lt. Noel Jones, hit eight establishments and Police early today when he was the burning. ship. The waterfront {confiscated more than 500 football pariay cards. ' arrested for stealing a radio from "3% A maze.qf hose, and fireboats. Police ‘say the raids tossed a|- : =

eer emp essen -|Vogel's Furniture Store, 1314 Ww, “ent theii arching sprays onto the Biggest haul came from the Washington St. ; Noronie, " .

, | POLICE said he admitted ‘being! At 9 a. m., the fire was under

|sachusets Ave., confiscating policy| Vogel, owner of the sfore, sald first through ‘the bow and thes

He was arrested with a“radio|ened alleyways and over the

{dead.

ton St. making no arrests but British Jet Plane Steel structures atop the 1 y

Lifeboats h crazily in their FELIXSTOWE, England, Sept.|davots, , evidence that the crew (UP)—A jet-propelled British'and - passengers never had & fighter. plane crashed into the chance to launch We

his Suffolk port today.|ers, police, com officials and Boats manned by local fisher-! Bh Ace ated “with

ergency. morgue. Z Se

Hollywood vv. 9| Your Job .... Tiblock

ot W. Washington Bt. and sl ~~ ition is not serious.

“ . : ) . . ala -~ - ; aa 5 Be . - “ A 2 . dla

St. police reported. | (plunge into the Channel, Continued